Monster leaves anonymous note after murdering neighbor’s dog

A brokenhearted Mississippi man searching for his lost dog received a cruel anonymous note in his mailbox saying the pooch had been shot dead.

Chad Stricker said received a plastic bag earlier this month with his dog’s collar and a typed letter from a callous neighbor who said they killed Stricker’s beloved wolfdog because she was digging through their trash.

“I’m sorry to inform you that your dog was shot and killed Saturday night while digging through my garbage,” the anonymous note read.

“It did not suffer and I did not take pleasure in killing It. There is a county leash law which you should abide by so that I do not have to kill any more of your pets.”

Stricker said he had spent days looking for the 10-month-old dog-wolf hybrid named Nymeria after she got out of his 10-acre property after a usual night roaming the yard with her older brother, Ghost.

In a Facebook post addressed to his dog’s killer, Stricker called his neighbor a coward for not telling him until days after the incident. Her collar included her name, address, Stricker’s phone number and a description of her personality.

“You allowed myself and countless other people to waste their time looking for my baby who was already dead,” the Pearl River County man wrote, calling his pup “one of the sweetest dogs around.”

“Secondly, you never gave me a chance to correct the problem, you never came to me and told me my dog was tearing up your trash,” he continued.

“It’s sad to think I have a neighbor of your moral character living so close to me that would do this,” he wrote.

“To think Nymeria was worth less than garbage or a damn phone call.”

The man went on to implore his neighbor to leave another note in his mailbox telling him where her body is so that he could give Nymeria “a proper burial.”

In rural Pearl River County, a leash law requires all animals to behind a fence or restrained with a leash, even if their owners do not live within city limits, the Sun Herald reported.

Stricker said the sheriff’s department informed him there was nothing they could do.

“It was on the other person’s property and landowners are protected in that matter. You feel bad for the animals. If it had been a chihuahua, would it have been shot?” Stricker told the Sun Herald.

“There should be laws to protect animal owners. No animal should be shot for going through someone’s trash.”